Rahm Emanuel Cuts Schools, Pensions While Preserving Fund For Corporate Subsidies

Months after Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said budget constraints forced him to push for pension cuts and mass school closures, an analysis of government documents reveals the city has $1.71 billion in special accounts often used to finance corporate subsidies. While the Emanuel administration has rejected open records requests for details of the subsidies, evidence suggests at least some of them have flowed to companies connected to Emanuel’s campaign donors.

The analysis conducted by the TIF Illumination Project evaluated the city’s 151 tax increment financing, or TIF, districts, which divert a share of property taxes out of accounts obligated to schools and into special accounts under the mayor’s control.

The report shows $412 million was diverted last year alone into the TIF accounts and out of traditional property tax funding streams, many of which are dedicated to the city’s schools. In 21 of those districts, the report says 90 percent or more of all property taxes were diverted into the TIF accounts.

Citing Chicago subsidies offered to S&C Electric Co., LaSalle Street Capital, United Airlines and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, an earlier study from the taxpayer watchdog group Good Jobs First found in the last 25 years, $5.5 billion of taxpayer money has gone into TIF accounts, and “much of the city’s TIF revenue was spent on subsidizing corporations, nonprofits and developers.” The amount of money diverted into TIFs has exploded in the last decade, and transparency advocates say under Emanuel, TIF projects have been shrouded in more secrecy than ever.

In its annual budget, the Emanuel administration defends the TIF programs, saying their goal is “promoting business, industrial and residential development in areas of the city that struggled to attract or retain housing, jobs or commercial activity.” The administration further argues the money is needed “for community projects, public improvements and incentives to attract private investment to the area.”

The latter argument has been used by Emanuel to spend hundreds of millions of TIF dollars on corporate development deals in some of the city’s wealthiest neighborhoods. The rationale echoes the claims made in places like New Jersey, Detroit and Miami where lawmakers have been simultaneously slashing public services and municipal workers’ pensions and using the savings to expand taxpayer subsidies to corporations. Those subsidies have supported everything from arenas and NBA practice facilities, to corporate office towers and shopping malls — and the subsidy recipients have often been major political donors.

With Chicago’s high-profile shootings and nation-leading murder count reigniting scrutiny of Emanuel’s austerity budget policies for the city’s police department, critics of the TIF subsidies say the cash for corporate subsidies would be better spent on the city’s traditional public services.

“TIF money alone wouldn’t solve all of our budget problems, but it would be a huge help,” said Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union who is considering a bid for mayor against Emanuel in 2015. Pointing to data from the new study showing the largest chunk of TIF resources being spent near the convention center on Chicago’s lakefront, she added: “TIFs were designed for neighborhoods that were underdeveloped and blighted, they were not designed for downtown areas that are not suffering.”

In all, the $412 million flooding into the TIF accounts now represents about a third of total property taxes collected by Chicago, Emanuel administrationbudget documents show. University of Illinois researchers found in 2010 had the school system been permitted its traditional share of those property taxes, it would have had $267 million more in annual revenue — adding about 5 percent to the school system’s current $5.8 billion budget.

In 2013, as Emanuel was pushing to spend $125 million of taxpayer money on a stadium development deal for a private university, the mayor said the need for budget savings compelled himto order the largest public school closing in American history. The budget mandating those school closures included a $68 million cut to classroom programs. For comparison, Cook County Clerk David Orr has said modest changes in the TIF program could recapture $44 million for schools. The Chicago City Council’s progressive caucus has estimated $200 million in uncommitted funds are sitting in TIF accounts.

At the time of the school closures, Emanuel rejected proposals from locallawmakers to release more TIF funds to prevent some of the cuts. His allies on the City Council subsequently voted down legislation to redirect TIF money into schools.

“You cannot either tax your way or TIF your way out of this problem,” the mayor said at a press conference defending his position.

Emanuel made a similar argument when he cited budget constraints as the rationale behind his pension reform bill that is estimated to cost municipal workers $55 million. Reuters reports Chicago faces a $1 billion pension payment in 2014 and an overall 30-year, $19.2 billion pension shortfall. Yet, Emanuel has preserved the TIF accounts despite the Good Jobs First report concluding “property tax diversions into TIF have exceeded pension costs in every year since 2007.”

In a statement to Crain’s Chicago Business, the Emanuel administration argued TIF resources represent “a tiny fraction of the money needed to secure retirements for those in the city’s pension funds.”

In an interview with IBTimes, Alderman Scott Waguespack disputed that conclusion.

“TIFs are taking almost $500 million a year, and that’s extremely substantial,” he said. “I’m not saying that money is going to solve the whole budget problem — you need to cut spending in other areas — but you can see that the bulk of the solution could come from serious TIF reform.”

Facing plummeting poll numbers in advance of his 2015 reelection campaign, Emanuel in recent months has responded to criticism of the TIFs by using his discretion to direct some TIF resources into his hand-picked education projects (including a controversial $60 million TIF expenditure for a charter school named after Emanuel’s old White House boss, President Barack Obama). However, at the same time, Emanuel has pushed a tax hike proposal to increasethe amount of TIF cash at his disposal, and he has delivered big TIF awards to aid commercial development projects, some of which are in wealthy neighborhoods.

While Chicago budget documents officially classify many of these projects as “public improvements,” many of these projects have benefited companiesconnected to Emanuel’s campaign contributors. For example:


To read the rest of this article on the International Business Times website, click here.


Curated from www.ibtimes.com

Neoliberalism

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *